#1
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Alexi Grewal Serotta Coors Light 91 bike
Very cool bike. I remember seeing him race on this bike. He always had some interesting bike because of a back injury he had.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/33556277800...mis&media=COPY |
#2
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Looks like a Clark-Kent with Serotta paint.
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#3
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It's a Serotta thru and thru. Dave Kirk built that!
That said, what a weird bike. |
#4
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Starting price seems reasonable considering it's a race ridden bike of a men's Olympic gold medal winner.
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#5
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whatever happened to him? i remember reading a decade or so ago about lot of post-cycling life & career challenges.
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#6
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Last I heard he was living in Colorado building handmade furniture.
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#7
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Wow, very cool bike....takes me back to the Coors/Serotta frame I found in an Austin backyard shed that Dave believed was also Alexi's, but pre-car crash (which he now owns again).
Nice piece of cycling history but seems like an awfully optimistic asking price.
__________________
IG: teambikecollector |
#8
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It's fun to see that bike again. They were such a PITA to build if for no other reason that they didn't fit on our jigs and fixtures. Some parts of the build needed to be done free-hand with a straight edge and some string. The bottom bracket shell had a portion of it removed to allow the rear tire to protrude into that space. As I recall the chainstays were 36.0 cm.
I built 2 or 3 of these before Alexi switched to a Softride system and I needed to build softride versions of this frame. Those builds too so much time. One of the Coors Light softride bikes broke a number of years ago and it was sent to me for repair. That was a fun walk down memory lane! I was in touch with Alexi a number of years ago after he started riding again after many years off the bike. Last I heard he'd married a woman from India and I think he moved there to be with her. I hope he's well. Life has been a real challenge for him and I hope he has found some peace. If money was no object I'd buy this bike just to hang it up in the shop. dave |
#9
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I wouldn't mind pitching in a few bucks for it to go to a deserving home
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#10
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Wonder if it’s the same one I saw him ride up Mt Evans!? 1992 I think. Wish I still had that purple fleece…
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Enjoy every sandwich. -W. Zevon |
#11
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I see the geometry has the rear wheel pushed forward, plus the saddle is on a zero-setback seatpost, plus the saddle is pushed forward on its rails, plus a long stem. The handling must be...interesting, I'll go with interesting.
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#12
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I had a Clark • Kent with the same curved seat tube/short stay approach but in a 63cm that was a complete turd. The front derailleur brazeon was way out of spec for any derailleur and it was just a terrible bike. Looked cool, though, and CK was a hot brand for about a minute and a half in 1992. Iirc I bought it on impulse and canceled the order I’d placed for a landshark. Wish I’d stuck with the shark…
__________________
Enjoy every sandwich. -W. Zevon |
#13
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IT sure does look like it!
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#14
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Bike in question
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#15
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A more interesting discussion would be what happened to the Pinarello Alexi rode to the Olympic gold medal.
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